The first thing we want to point out is that since 2019, we've created a program that significantly expands how the service does outreach and engagement with communities across the country, recognizing that it's our responsibility and our duty to protect all Canadians. We have deployed significant resources, time and effort in rebuilding trust where trust had been lost or fractured, acknowledging and atoning for some of the mistakes that we've made in the past with communities.
We have made some significant progress in building that trust. It takes time, it takes patience and it takes humility. We have brought all of that to bear in our efforts to build these relationships. We continue to have daily conversations, weekly meetings—face-to-face or over the phone—emails and everything to make sure that we are available to communities when they need to talk to somebody about the service or about threats they're feeling. We do recognize, especially in the context of foreign interference, that often the first victims of that activity are the communities themselves—diaspora communities and marginalized communities.
It's really important to us to make sure that we are protecting the interests of all Canadians.